ISSN 2029-2074 REPRESENTING THE SPACE OF THE NATION IN 1960’S ESTONIAN CINEMA Eva Näripea Estonian Academy of Arts (Estonia) Keywords: Estonian cinema, representations of space, representations of history, national identities. Pagrindinės sąvokos: Estijos kinas, erdvės vaizdavimas, istorijos vaizdavimas, tautiniai tapatumai. Introduction The first decade of the 2000s witnessed some remarkable developments in Estonian cinema. Most noticeably, during the years of recent economic boom, the number of local productions took a drastic swing upwards with considerable assistance from the remodelled system of state subsidies for film-making, peaking in 2007 when a total of nine domestic feature films premiered in Estonia (Baltic Films… 2008). More importantly, however, the numerous prizes awarded to Estonian films at distinguished international festivals have both created a growing interest towards Estonian cinema on the global level and increased its reputation among the native audiences. While some attempts have been made to generate awareness of the local “cinearcheology” on the academic arena of film studies – both abroad and at home – the broader audiences are still under a strong impression that Esto- nian cinema as an individual sector of national cultural production was not formed until after the Estonian state was re-established in the early 1990s. Indeed, this attitude is a clear signifier of the fact that a certain branch and period of the Estonian culture – Soviet Estonian cinema – described accu- rately as a “great loner” already in the 1960s (Meri 1968), has firmly main- 90 tained the marginal position and that Soviet Estonian cinema is still not recognised as a self-evident part of the local cultural domain, at least not in the wider, popular imaginary. Yet a closer look at the historical evidence suggests that it is entirely justifiable to trace the lineage of Estonian cinema as a “national” phenomenon back at least to the 1960s, when it (re)emerged in a situation where the Estonian nation-state had been abolished politi- cally by the Soviet regime, which at the same time had also been responsi- ble for establishing the fully functioning system of film-making. Thus, in a nutshell, Soviet Estonian cinema was an immanently liminal phenomenon: during the immediate post-war years it was initially found and equipped, in terms of ideology, technology and manpower, by central Soviet authori- ties, yet in the early 1960s local film-makers, newly graduated from the All- Union State Institute of Cinematography in Moscow, along with Estonian writers, managed to turn it into a vehicle for producing indigenous, locally rooted culture. This transposition, however, was not entirely successful, as proposed above: because of the several Eastern (or, more precisely, Soviet) born transnational factors and influences which affected heavily the devel- opment of Soviet Estonian cinema, it remained relatively alienated from the core of the Estonian cultural body. On the other hand, the republic’s geo- graphical location on the Western rim of the Soviet Union also introduced transnational elements of Western origin: Finnish TV and other (media) channels offered rather profound impulses to the Estonian cinematic ecol- ogy. This paper examines Soviet Estonian feature films production of the 1960s and seeks to demonstrate that while it was inseparably tied to the Un- ion-wide, i.e. transnational, cinematic circuits, both in terms of policies and practices, themes and topics, the Estonian production nevertheless sculpt- ed a distinctive, i.e. national, sensibility. The prevailing cinelandscapes and filmic spaces of the period offer strikingly effective manifestations of these dialogues between national and transnational currents. I propose that the dominant and distinctive spatial orders of the Soviet Estonian feature films of the 1960s could be gathered under a single umbrella concept – motion. A specific sense of mobility, whether in regard to the increasing intellectual freedom and exchange, to the broadening cultural vistas or to the relative relaxing of repressive politics, indeed permeated the whole Soviet society during the “thaw” of Khrushchev’s tenure. Yet in Soviet Estonian cinema it became most apparent via two recurring and interlinked spatial motives – those of landscape and border, which, additionally, functioned as bearers and signifiers of local, i.e. national, identities and (hi)stories. R 91 Evgenii Margolit, reckoning the distinctive elements of spatial repre- sentations in Soviet cinema during the Stalinist high point of the socialist realist discourse, argues that: Cinelandscape at this time is static; it exists disconnected from the character, as a separate, and in the best cases, picturesque background. Landscapes depicting winter and summer are preferable to those that represent transitional seasons, which lack complete clarity, and are, therefore, less common. Movement is not encouraged: the world is interpreted as having attained its full realization, not as “becoming” but “has already become” to use Mikhail Bakhtin’s terminology (Margolit 2001: 31–32). As the visual imagery of landscape is a forceful device of propaganda, easily subordinated to the service of communicating the messages of the dominant ideology (Sooväli 2008: 134), it is not surprising to discover that the above-described strategies of representation prevailed in the cinematic production all over the Soviet Union, including the imported film culture of Estonian SSR of the 1950s (in detail, see Näripea 2008). Heroic, static and monumental images of landscapes, however, disappeared gradually, first, in the mid-1950s, from the groundbreaking productions of larger (central) studios, such as Marlen Khutsiev and Feliks Mironer’s Spring on Zarech- naya Street (Vesna na Zarečnoj ulice 1956), Mikhail Kalatozov’s award- winning The Cranes Are Flying (Letjat žuravli 1957) or Grigori Chukhrai’s much-celebrated Ballad of a Soldier (Ballada o soldate 1959), and then, in the first part of the 1960s, also from the more peripheral works of the new generation of Soviet Estonian filmmakers. People and their everyday lives, divorced from the picturesque landscapes in Stalinist films, were recon- nected with their surroundings, the nature. In Estonian cinema, this be- comes apparent, first and foremost, in pictures which demonstrate people’s close relationship with nature and the immediate reliance of their liveli- hood on the gifts of nature, on the productivity of their agricultural and piscatory activities (depending on the setting of particular films). Thus, films like Fellow-Villagers (Ühe küla mehed, directed by Jüri Müür 1962), Ice Drift (Jääminek, directed by Kaljo Kiisk 1962) or Letters from Sõgedate Village (Kirjad Sõgedate külast, directed by Jüri Müür 1966) show that re- gardless of changes in political circumstances and ideological regime the people inhabiting the seaboard maintain, at least in some scope, their cus- tomary sources of substance and patterns of existence, which rely to a great 92 extent upon the seasonal rhythms, as well as upon the profound respect for the elements. Notably, these representations also testify to the tendency to annul, or at least discard from the centre of attention, the immediate (Soviet) realities – a practice dominating the spatial regime of narrative cinema throughout the decade, which found its expression in a relative in- difference towards depicting contemporary life of kolkhozes; instead, film- makers preferred to conjure up the semi-mythic “ideal landscapes” of the interwar countryside, creating thus imaginary spaces of existence for the nation without a nation-state – veritable nation-scapes. Ironically, however, in a sense this tactic of ignorance also served to “normalise” these Soviet realities. At the same time, the plots of these films reveal that nature and the relationship between people and environment are also heavily invested with symbolism and allusions, which on some occasions and to a certain extent might be read as subversive of the established order. In both Fellow- Villagers and Ice Drift, for instance, nature is not merely a passive horizon, a simple backdrop; rather, it functions as an important trigger of events, an active narrative agent. Fellow-Villagers, a film regarded by many commentators as the first “truly” Estonian production of the Soviet years (e.g. Elmanovitš 1995: 517– 518), tells the story of a group of fishermen from a northern Estonian coast- al village whose boat deviates from its course in a violent storm and drifts to the Finnish shores. The men find shelter with their Finnish peers, while also encountering a former fellow-villager Feliks Kandel, an émigré spy of an undefined “capitalist agency” who triesto induce his countrymen to stay in the West. Finally, however, despite this and several other enticements all the men return home safely. In this film, the storm is one of the main narrative mechanisms (the other being the intoxicated boat mechanic, who presum- ably fell prey to the corruptive influence of alcohol due to his severe conflict with the surrounding (Soviet) reality, causing the accident on the sea and setting thus in motion the entire chain of action. Facing the tempest, the men are powerless; they cannot control the nature because of the failure of the (Soviet) technology and lack of knowhow caused by the contaminative effect of the (socio-political) environment (i.e. the drunkard mechanic). Equally crucial role of the elemental forces becomes apparent in
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